TY - JOUR
T1 - Academic Buoyancy in High School
T2 - A Cross-Lagged Multilevel Modeling Approach Exploring Reciprocal Effects With Perceived School Support, Motivation, and Engagement
AU - Bostwick, Keiko C.P.
AU - Martin, Andrew J.
AU - Collie, Rebecca J.
AU - Burns, Emma C.
AU - Hare, Nicole
AU - Cox, Samuel
AU - Flesken, Anaïd
AU - McCarthy, Ian
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by the New South Wales Department of Education (UNSWRG193170).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022. American Psychological Association
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The present longitudinal study examined the reciprocal relationships among students’ academic buoyancy, their perceptions of school support (learning support, teacher relational support, school belonging, and classroom management), and their motivation and engagement (perseverance, perceived competence, valuing of school) across 1 year of school. Using information from a large sample of secondary school students (Grades 7–11) in New South Wales, Australia (N = 71,681 students, K = 292 schools), the current study examined a series of single-level (students) and doubly-latent multilevel (students and schools) cross-lagged structural equation models. At the student level, results revealed a reciprocal relationship among students’ sense of school belonging and academic buoyancy. There were also several significant directional paths at the student level, such that academic buoyancy predicted students’ motivation, engagement, and perceptions of school support 1 year later. At the school level, there were no significant reciprocal effects, but there were significant directional effects such that schools with higher average classroom management and school belonging tended to also have higher average academic buoyancy 1 year later. These findings contribute to ongoing research into ways researchers and educators may support and optimize student and whole-school academic buoyancy.
AB - The present longitudinal study examined the reciprocal relationships among students’ academic buoyancy, their perceptions of school support (learning support, teacher relational support, school belonging, and classroom management), and their motivation and engagement (perseverance, perceived competence, valuing of school) across 1 year of school. Using information from a large sample of secondary school students (Grades 7–11) in New South Wales, Australia (N = 71,681 students, K = 292 schools), the current study examined a series of single-level (students) and doubly-latent multilevel (students and schools) cross-lagged structural equation models. At the student level, results revealed a reciprocal relationship among students’ sense of school belonging and academic buoyancy. There were also several significant directional paths at the student level, such that academic buoyancy predicted students’ motivation, engagement, and perceptions of school support 1 year later. At the school level, there were no significant reciprocal effects, but there were significant directional effects such that schools with higher average classroom management and school belonging tended to also have higher average academic buoyancy 1 year later. These findings contribute to ongoing research into ways researchers and educators may support and optimize student and whole-school academic buoyancy.
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U2 - 10.1037/edu0000753
DO - 10.1037/edu0000753
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85131946523
SN - 0022-0663
JO - Journal of Educational Psychology
JF - Journal of Educational Psychology
ER -